Michigan Today - April 2008

Text Size

April 2008 | Home

U-M Heritage

Professor White's Trees

U-M Heritage

Do you love the Diag, with its criss-cross paths and canopy of trees? If so, you have one man to thank. The story of Andrew White, who nurtured intellects and seedlings alike.

Most emailed stories

HEALTH

Spring cleaning for your nose

Nose

Allergies? Sinus problems? A good schnozz-cleaning is literally just what the doctor ordered. Here's how to do it.

Talking about words

Trophies

Talking about words

Our language guru considers "signes of victorye" from the Stanley Cup to Ashton Kutcher.

Talking about movies

The talkies' first great screenwriter

Dudley Nichols

Dudley Nichols gave John Wayne some of his best lines, and his screwball writing for Hepburn and Grant remains hilarious. If you want to know movies, you need to know about Nichols.

U-M IN THE WORLD

An undeclared crisis

'Weathered (Self-Portrait) by Robert Dockter

The US now incarcerates more people than any other country. More than one percent of the US population is behind bars. U-M profs say there's a better way.

research news

U-M researchers involved in oldest European human fossil find

March 27, 2008

Top view of the mandible

Top view of the mandible ATE 9-1. Credit: EIA/Jordi Mestre

Inside of jawbone

Inside of jawbone. Credit: EIA/Jordi Mestre

University of Michigan researcher Josep M. Pares is part of a team that has discovered the oldest known remains of human ancestors in Western Europe.

The find shows that members of the genus Homo, to which modern humans belong, colonized the region much earlier than previously believed. Details of the discovery were published in the March 27 issue of the journal Nature.

The fossil—a small piece of jawbone with a few teeth—was found last year in a cave in the mountains of northern Spain, along with primitive stone tools and bones of animals that appear to have been butchered. The team, led by Spanish researchers Juan Luis Arsuaga, José María Bermúdez de Castro and Eudald Carbonell, used three separate techniques (including paleomagnetic analyses performed by Pares) to determine that the fossil is about 1.2 million years old. That's 500,000 years older than the previous oldest known humanlike fossils from the area. The new find bolsters the view that Homo reached Europe not long after leaving Africa almost 2 million years ago.

"It seems probable that the first European population came from the region of the Near East, the true crossroads between Africa and Eurasia, and that it was related to the first demographic expansion out of Africa," said Pares, who is a research scientist in the U-M Department of Geological Sciences and program director of the newly created National Research Center on Human Evolution (CENIEH) in Burgos, Spain, with which most of the authors are affiliated.

The researchers tentatively classified the new fossil as an earlier example Homo antecessor (Pioneer Man), the species represented by the previous oldest fossils and thought to be the last common ancestor of Neanderthals and modern humans.

"This is a very significant advance toward a better understanding of the nature, age and protagonists of the first European human settlement," Pares said.

Nancy Ross-Flanigan is a writer with the University of Michigan News Service